Atlantika Collective Inaugural Exhibition: Installation in Progress

The exhibition is coming together at the Boyden Gallery, St. Mary's College of Maryland! Check out Gabriela Bulisova and Mark Isaac in this video working to install a site-specific piece. As you can tell, you'll want to see this interactive, water-based work when it's in place.

Below are selections from Gabriela's photographic project in the exhibition - a few of her images and a shot of work as it's printing, always a satisfying moment in the production process. 

We hope you can join us for the opening of The Watershed Project at Boyden Gallery at St. Mary's College of Maryland on Friday, October 21st, 6-8pm. 

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Mashup - A Curator's Text Feed

Cristin Cash (+ her smartphone)

Preparator: Shit. Call me when you can
Curator: Can u talk?
Preparator: Sorry, I can’t talk right now
Curator: No worries…we’ll figure it out 😀
Preparator: Hey, call me when you have a chance
Preparator: Or, just meet me at Buffalo Wild Wings. I’ll buy you cheese curds.

Artist 1: ...Anything I can do to help?
Curator:  Nope. Just keep creating 😀

Artist 3:  Do you think that is doable?
Curator: Sounds good! Give me an update when you have a budget
Artist 1: Thanks for the credit card info, I’ll order tomorrow
Curator 2: Note to self: never, ever, ever commit to a due date that coincides with the beginning of the semester!
Artist 3: Hey, so which email do you prefer again?
Preparator: Next thing is to install water-monitors on floor
Curator: That’s a thing? How much $?
Preparator: Amazon it…If you get fancy – it emails or texts you!
Curator: Will do. Do I need to pick up the Beast today?
Preparator: Nope. Something went wrong there…strange
Curator: My whole life is strange. I’ll give them a call
Preparator: lol
Curator: Paint color email coming at you in a second…
Curator: and no attachment…sorry! That kind of day already. oy
Artist 2: Maybe it would be better to try a totally different design actually?
Curator: I really need to get a couple of images for the poster
Artist 3: Well, shit, blew past that deadline yesterday for PR images... will get on it...
Artist 1: Goodness! We too...sorry! What sizes and how many per person? Grrrr, insane times
Preparator: We could replace the entire gallery with LED, including angle lenses for under $2000
Curator: Sounds good, who pays?
Preparator: HAHAHA…the LED TV OFFSETS the energy costs for the projectors
Artist 2: Hi all, it is unfortunately confirmed now that I will be in Finland for a work conference
Curator 2: so…more poetic, less descriptive?
Artist 3: Sorry I'm so addled, what did we settle on for meeting time/place?
Curator:  😱😬😐😵
Curator: Need cheese curds
Preparator: Awwww, So do I…but no time

Artist 1: I have a 20 min video ready for your 👀😅
Curator:  😀😀😀😀😀😀😎
Artist 1: The grids are alive!
Curator:  😍😍😍😍😍😍😍
Artist 1: Drip drip drip pan is a beauty
Artist 2: Great!!!
Curator: Lovely and fast delivery! Wheeeeeeeeeee 😎
Artist 2: Shipped: Your Amazon package with Empty IV Container/Bag, 1000ml, 60 DPM Needless IV Admin Set will be delivered Wed, Oct 12. Track at…
Curator: Wooohoo!
Artist 3: Can you take a look at my final edit?
Curator: Hell yeah! Dropbox that shit
Preparator: We can go over the materials list on Monday. All orders are placed.
Curator: Picking up paint on way in
Curator 2: Group post is up! Feel free to repost, push it out there, and what all.
Artist 1: 👏🍷🌟🐠
Artist 3: Yeah man! Go AKA!

#TBT - Fairhaven retreat

Bill Crandall

Photography is a notoriously lonely occupation. You’re out there in the world, trying to figure out what to do, where to go, how to translate the often vague ideas in your head, how to conjure them into reality. You see wonderful things but also depressing things. No one is promising to pay you, or reward you, or even notice whether you do or don’t succeed. You get sick, you get better, or you carry on anyway. You wish someone would tell you what to do, until you remind yourself that’s a fatal copout. The whole point is that it has to come from you.

So no wonder that photographers cherish the camaraderie and insight of their peers. People who get what you’re after and care enough to want to help you ‘get there’. This is the allure of the collective.

Also no wonder that it’s very special and rare when you get the chance to connect your work in meaningful ways with the public, especially with those with concern or rooting interest in the subject matter. This is where community outreach comes in. In Atlantika we made it part of our mission statement to create threads of connection beyond the group. To amplify the power of our work through collaboration with the community.

For one of our group weekend retreats late last spring, as we were pulling our Watershed work together in earnest for the St Mary’s exhibition, we decided to meet at my mother’s house in Fairhaven MD, which is overlooking the bay about twenty miles south of Annapolis.

The simple purpose of these retreats is to work on our projects and help other members work on theirs. The latter reason turned out to be particularly valuable, as Joe took my Bay project - which until then had been a long-running but not exactly coherent set of images from my years of watching my daughter grow up visiting grandma’s bayside world - and brought it into sharper focus by combining the images into diptychs. That new set of eyes helped redefine and shape the work in a way I wouldn’t have thought of.

Here's a few shots the lab sent me as they get ready to mount them on gatorboard for the show:

We also took the opportunity to meet with the community. After a weekend of editing and scraping things into form, local residents and members of local environmental groups came over to the house to have a look, talk it over, voice their own ideas. That feeling of going from detachment to connection was tremendously grounding for our efforts. The idea is that we’ll do Watershed as a series of exhibits, which will change and grow as we go, and bring the work to a variety of bay communities like Fairhaven.

Two Weeks Out! Watershed planning...

Conversation, project updates, space planning...and the 'medicinal' Hungarian liqueur that we'll surely need at some point, with the exhibition opening coming up quick!

Welcome to Atlantika! What We're About.

So who are we? Atlantika members want to make work that’s about something, motivated by a belief in the power and value of art. We’d all worked with each other in some combination before, and when we realized we all shared a commitment to addressing social issues through work that inspires us from an aesthetic standpoint and drives our own engagement and activism, we realized there were real opportunities here. To work in a free-form environment, erasing some traditional lines between media and roles that often define our individual professional work. To work on things we care about in ways we care about exploring and promoting. To put our ideas about art and social engagement into practice, with partners equally committed to process and results in such a collaborative spirit. As our conversations emerged we kept coming back to the same question and to the same ethos: how does a collective become more than the sum of its individuals? How does the group enable the individual voice? How can combining artists, writers, and curators in the same group take all of our work in new, different directions?

Both inside of Atlantika and in our own work, everyone does a real diversity of stuff, but we’re all makers, interpreters, and presenters at heart. Atlantika is all about raising questions and making connections, and in doing that we fully embrace a collaborative attitude, including transparency. We’ll offer a more public view of our creative process than is typical, to provide some insights into the process for shepherding work from idea to completion. And we believe this offers opportunities for new ideas, dialog, and critique. In this aspect of our collective intentions, we reach beyond our group to embrace other valued creative people and include them in our circle. Nearly as important as our commitment to process is our conviction to bringing work to completion. We believe strongly that if any of us have the vision or abilities that make us capable of producing something others find interesting, that is needed now.  

That’s who we are. Our name reflects that we’re in the mid-Atlantic region and, while our interests are diverse and our focus is international in scope, we do respond to the issues and concerns we find in our region. So as creative folks invested in environmental, community-oriented projects, we naturally gravitated to thoughts about water, specifically the Chesapeake Bay and its ecosystem that encompasses the entire mid-Atlantic region. And that’s where we’ve invested our first collective energies: Watershed.

The Watershed Project explores the environmental, social, and cultural state of the Chesapeake and its surroundings, through visual art and in collaboration with the communities that live there. In the coming weeks, we'll be posting about our process as we lead up to our first exhibition. So check back in with us right here, and in October come see the show at the Boyden Art Gallery at St. Mary's College of Maryland!

Romaine Brooks, Pulse, and Queer Visibility

Joe Lucchesi

I’ve been thinking about queer visibility past and present a lot lately. I am the consulting curator for “The Art of Romaine Brooks,” an exhibition that opened at the Smithsonian American Art Museum in Washington DC just five days after the largest mass shooting in U.S. history, on June 12 at the Orlando LGBTQ nightclub Pulse. These two events were not intuitively or obviously linked, but in the following days of grief, shock and mourning, their unexpected juxtaposition and links became more apparent. The opening of a queer-themed show at a federally funded museum a few blocks from the White House and the horrific killing of 49, mostly queer, people in Florida offered stark reminders of progress and of failure. During that week, the initial visitors to the show saw the Smithsonian’s forthright presentation of a lesbian artist’s eroticism, her challenges to dominant modernity, and her portraits’ (and sitters’) gender play in fashioning queer identities. Nearby on Capitol Hill, right-wing Congressional Republicans engaged in a political theater of public mourning, even as they deliberately erased the victims’ specific identities and refused the killer’s rationale for targeting this nightclub. On the one hand, the exhibition adopts queer visibility as a corrective to the closet of the past; on the other, that very visibility made queer people the targets of fatal, homophobic violence.

This is not to conflate two queer communities from different times and places, whose identities and experiences were vastly different. Brooks and her sitters were wealthy white women whose social privilege insulated them (somewhat) from the worst of early 20th century’s social prohibitions and consequences while, as has been widely reported, those who frequented Pulse were largely an already-vulnerable, mostly minority population. And yet both groups had known loss and alienation: many in Brooks’ circle gained personal freedom by abandoning family and home for lives as expatriates; some patrons of Pulse undoubtedly found refuge in local queer communities after rejection from biological families and friends. Both responded to this loss by creating safe alternative spaces where they could be visible to each other and free in their most authentic selves, whether in the creative, expat salons of London and Paris or in the LGBTQ nightclub.

It’s this aspect of the Pulse shootings that I grieve the most, that a space of freedom, safety and refuge was violated and turned into a killing ground. More than that, now a younger generation of queer people must incorporate the same feeling of fear, of being a target, that it was beginning to feel - at least for a moment - they would have the luxury of not knowing, and that their older peers had worked so hard to protect and insulate them from in forging just these queer-centric spaces of independence or escape. Performance studies scholar Julia Steinmetz has written poignantly about this eruption of violence, death, and fear inside a space of queer joy and innocence, responding to the artist Cassils’ beautiful, sad film project 103 Shots  developed with queer people attending San Francisco Pride in the immediate wake of Pulse.

Queer communities are communities always in the process of becoming, whether it is a group of women self-fashioning identities of modernity and gender play, or Floridians who must now incorporate new grief and sadness into their knowledge of self and must now remember the constant threat of homophobic violence that some may have believed had begun to recede into forgetting. But as was true in 1920s Europe, the process for these LGBTQ communities remains the same: resist, bear witness, continue, grow.

Walking through the galleries in that moment of mourning after the Pulse massacre, the quietness and seriousness of Brooks’ work seemed to resonate differently to me. Melancholic, but also strong and resolved. Passing the visitor comment book, I noticed this on one of its first pages:

(6/16/16) Ever since HIDE/SEEK, I’ve come here often. Today, just after the Pulse tragedy in Orlando, I was comforted by the Romaine Brooks exhibit. This is a welcoming place.

And in that brief moment, I knew that across time, space and a multitude of differences, queer visibility is a necessity, queer solidarity both possible and imperative.

Playa Thoughts, Part One

Cristin Cash

 

I don’t think of myself as an artist. Never have.

I don’t “make” anything.

I don’t want to stare at a blank canvas. I’m not compelled by a pile of wood.

Creating something from nothing, who enjoys that?

But I have nothing to say.

 

A blank wall? An empty room? Welllll, that’s another thing.

Infinite potential. Limited capacity.

Stories to tell. Things to see!

 

Just one more…I can fit one more. Nope. No I can’t. Maybe a little one?

That blue just isn’t working. Lose it.

That lime green is too caustic, try it next to something else. Oh, better. Now move that one. I can’t stop looking at that one. It’s a star.

Adjust the lights.

Yes. Yes. I can see it now.

Show me. I want to see.

____________

We look, we shape, we assess, we decide what is worth looking at. What is worth seeing? What is worth our consideration – in a world full of things to see, things to consider.  Show me. I want to see.

What do you think? Is it what you want me to see? Is it what you want to see?

Color? Sure. YES. YES. In this case, absolutely yes.

 

What is the line between creation and curation ?

We see patterns, we make connections, we tell stories through things, framed and presented just so. For your consideration. Make sense of it as you can, it is only what is there to see.

The world is infinite, beautiful, treacherous, full of limited potential and boundless restrictions. We frame reality, present a vision that elevates and keeps us grounded.

Color. Light. Line. Texture. Depth. It’s all there. It changes every day.

Show me. I want to see.

RETURNS (Chapter 1)

Gabriela Bulisova

returns_AKA_I_01.jpg

Gabriela Bulisova

Returns is a personal project I’ve been working on since I first returned to Slovakia with a camera in my hands. It’s the most personal project I’ve ever worked on, painfully so.

I have lived in the United States for two decades now. Returns home are never easy; they never fail to expose the profound geographic divide that expresses itself in (often repressed) emotional and physical pain. My camera functions as a tool to hide behind, as a way to observe, relate, communicate and bridge the times and moments that were lost, gone, and never experienced…by me.

The project, perhaps never truly innocent, ultimately turned into an identity search; a search not only for myself but for my parents and closest relatives, and for people who are not there anymore. And it became not just a search for the past but a search for the present moment on two different continents.

I got up and walked away from this post many times, every time hoping it would be gone when I came back, hoping I would not have to continue remembering and thinking and making sense of the work and my own self. But the more times I abandoned it, the more the thoughts in my head gained in volume, mocking me in a loud voice: “We are here to stay; deal with us!”

I don’t want this post to be about my childhood. I don’t want it to be about the time that led me to decide to leave everybody and everything. I don’t want to think about the years I missed seeing the lives of my loved ones. And, I certainly don’t want to talk about losing some of those who are irreplaceable and dearest to me.

But I must write down some words that will help me with editing and sequencing my pictures, words that will inform viewers about my intentions and my way of seeing. And inform them of the people and places I want them to meet and experience. So I stay and write and delete. And I delete again…

And that’s Returns. It’s about me and my parents and my home and my loved ones and the village and the country of Slovakia and me again and the changing relationships I have with each and all of them. It’s about finding my way there and to them and to making memories. It’s about the many past and future returns.

The photographs are grouped in three chapters. The first chapter portrays my grandaunt and uncle; Gizela and Julius. Chapter two is about my mother and father and brother and life in the village, and later, about the absence of my father. And (for now), the last chapter focuses mainly on mother as she navigates through being alone, living without a man with whom she shared 49 years and then lost without warning. I am there, in each one of the images, trying to breathe life into moments past…

Thumb notes and photographing the invisible

Bill Crandall

My good friend and collaborator Craig Czury is doing a poetry event at Upshur Street Books on Feb 16th, if you're in Washington DC mark your calendars. Craig is an old school poet-warrior with the soul of a documentarian, with an enigmatic way of looking at things. We've been working together on an ongoing fracking-related project combining his words and my pictures from around where he lives in rural northeastern PA - fracking ground zero, the Marcellus Shale region. This event is for the release of his latest book, Thumb Notes Almanac, docu-poems he made by hitchhiking up and down the rural highways and back roads and chatting up locals and fracking workers alike. He creates a humanistic, nonpartisan mosaic of voices from a region under duress.

We’re planning a book of our joint work too. I think our visions meshed well, since we both like getting at a story indirectly, through the side door. I remember an intro to a Josef Koudelka book that calls Koudelka a ‘secretary to the invisible’, which always struck me as a noble guiding principle. How to illustrate an issue that is mostly invisible (fracking happens two miles underground)? For me, it wasn’t about shots of fracking towers as much as a feeling for the land. I consider it a landscape series.

I’ll probably make one or two more visits up there to keep the project going. Fracking activity, and the ripple effect on the community, is constantly in flux. Below is a photo I took of a well pad that seemed fairly innocuous. I couldn’t tell if it was under construction, or deconstruction, or was simply a dormant former drilling spot. (On a tragic side note, the family across the road who owns the property got a big windfall for signing off on the land rights. They spent part of the money on a four-wheeler for their teenage son, who promptly crashed it and died.)

This is right up the road from where Craig lives in an old rural schoolhouse converted to artist studios. Here’s a night shot he sent more recently of the same spot:

If you want to see how our project is shaping up so far, take a look on my website.

It's a Robot, Baby

Joe Lucchesi

Like a lot of folks, I’ve been thinking about love in the time of robots lately. A recent viral video of a smiling electronic baby happily squirming in its UCSD Machine Perception crib really sent me over the edge, plunging into the uncanny valley. Looking at something close - its nubby teeth and charmingly squinty expressions, but not close enough - its rubbery skin jaggedly meeting its acrylic blue skull, produced a visceral sense of existential angst that took me by surprise.

Could this almost-baby potentially be my technological successor, my reaction already intuiting my own technological insufficiency? Maybe. Could it also be that the video is yet another irresistible metaphor of machinery mediating any and all intimate relationships? But this is a social media fact that projected our love lives into the digital realm back in the internet equivalent of the stone age.

Or perhaps my response was a jarring realization that our robot overlords have arrived, and unlike what pop culture has led us to believe, it wasn’t in the form of an inexorable army of powerful replicants, or deceptively charming and attractive lackeys lulling us into a false sense of pampered security, or even the friendly neighborhood drone delivering my mail. It arrived in the form of a gurgling, happy baby making cute for my benefit. Some aspect of all these notions fed my momentary vertigo on the edge of the technological ravine, but mostly I think I reacted from a sense of self-betrayal - the robot baby caught me off guard because this already exists. It might be too late, and I hadn’t even noticed.

Programmed using newly-available big data drawn from studies of infant responses by developmental psychologists, one of my more sobering thoughts in staring down that video was that our physiological human reactions had been recorded, translated, crunched, freely exchanged and turned into a simulated replica of ourselves, programmed into a silicone equivalent whose goal is then to teach us about developing human interactivity and emotion. The breathtakingly efficient inversion of that exchange is what worries me now, as though we’ve already ceded the territory of invisible human connection to its quantified doppelganger. This feels like one more step to making technological conquest both plausible and palatable.

Human relationships mediated by technology are nothing new, only taking new forms appropriate to the age. The camera, the telegraph, and the telephone all opened up new possibilities for connectivity across time and space even as they subtly initiated an easily-ignored gap in which we’re dealing with disembodied versions of each other, negotiated across this divide. And that’s only in recent history. As that video suggests, some folks think of the uncanny valley as only a warning of an unsolved problem. But others see this sense of uneasiness when confronted with our almost-selves differently, as a prompt to think about the human within that gap. 

So maybe I should thank the robot baby for its charming and off-putting chubby grins, its inability to perfectly simulate human behavior and - in turn apparently - teach us about our own development.

Our human relationship to the natural world can’t be far behind in all this unsettled estrangement, and of course is already here. Server farms succeed the agri-business conglomerate that itself replaced the family farm in the vast plains of American productivity, producing a new crop we increasingly rely on for sustenance.

The question then becomes: can we live on data alone across the rolling hills of the fertile uncanny valley? We can’t, but robot babies do.

Water Near Water Street

Mark Isaac

New work-in-progress, using satellite imagery of the Chesapeake Bay watershed

Water, Water, Everywhere

Water is essential to life on earth. It covers more than two-thirds of the Earth’s surface. More than half of our bodies are water. 

Water is beautiful. It falls from the sky into puddles that reflect the world above. It freezes into snowflakes of endless crystalline complexity. It flows, always downward, sometimes plunging over perilous falls. It crests into waves and crashes against the shore incessantly. It changes faces constantly, spanning the color spectrum, and transforming freely from liquid to gas to solid. It evaporates in one of the world’s most sensational disappearing acts.

The Ever-Changing Face of Water

Water is always different. It is wind-whipped, emerald green, and cresting with little waves. It is calm and almost flat and very dark. It is brown but in a variety of shades, giving evidence of strikingly different depths. It is black but with innumerable colored stars in its firmament, as if the night had fallen from the sky and plunged into the saltwater. It is filled with arresting highly saturated reflections in geometric patterns. It is sliced by the wake of boat traffic. It reveals the tracks of humans traversing water on bridges. It exposes the impact of dredging and dumping. It cascades along rocks in tributaries. It always demonstrating exceptional diversity, but it is also pointedly reminding us of the threat against that diversity – the human activities that call into question the Bay’s long-term existence.  

Water in Crisis

Water is scarce. It is polluted. It is poisoning children in Flint, Michigan. It is causing fish to mutate. It contains Viagra and Tylenol and Prozac. Wars will be fought over access to water. Water is in crisis.

Water From the Sky

Because of water’s centrality to life, innumerable artists have sought to portray it from many different vantage points. One of the artists who has captured both water’s beauty and the environmental catastrophes it faces is Edward Burtynsky, who captured his expansive images of water from far above, in airplanes. These images are majestic and sweepingly beautiful at the same time that they call attention to the many ways in which human intervention is damaging this vital natural resource and threatening the future of the planet.

We are also living in a time not only of air travel, but of satellite surveillance of the entire surface of the planet. As an artist, I have been deeply intrigued by the extent of this surveillance, which is at the same time threateningly comprehensive, endlessly fascinating, and intensely beautiful. I decided that one vantage point from which to view the Chesapeake Bay watershed should be from the vantage point of surveillance satellites in outer space. 

Water Near Water Street

In the accompanying work, titled Water Near Water Street, created recently in the experimental spirit that Atlantika is seeking to cultivate, I have appropriated satellite imagery of the Chesapeake Bay Watershed. I have also sought to connect the water to the land and the world of human workplaces and domiciles through a simple construct: searching for images of water that are near streets named after the water. In the Chesapeake Bay region, these streets are everywhere, named for the most important feature of the surrounding landscape: Water Street, Chesapeake Avenue, Bay Parkway, and on and on. These streets appear throughout the bay region, and often within steps, there it is: the water. 

Water Near Water Street is still very much in an experimental phase, so I invite your comment and input. Also, Atlantika Collective is planning an exhibition related to the Chesapeake Bay watershed in October to November 2016. I will post more about this upcoming exhibition and our joint efforts, as a collective, to approach the challenges that the Chesapeake Bay faces from an artistic vantage point.

A brief conversation...

Cristin Cash

This is important. 
How can you not see that?
I’d prefer you did something else. 
But this is about people’s lives. Their stories. Their voices. Our community.
Isn’t that what we are supposed to be doing?
Perhaps something without any risk?
Your risk is my mission, and my mission is their social engagement.
But what will people say? What will they think?
I don’t know. That’s what makes it exciting. That’s what makes it important.
The data shows art isn’t relevant anymore. 
It’s just art, no one cares. 
Resources are better spent where there is greater demand.
Then why are you trying to shut the exhibition down. 
I’m not. I’d just prefer you did something else. 
Perhaps something without any risk.

I think my blog post is going really well… but I’m checking with the lawyer.

Cafe Cultura

Bill Crandall

Skyped last week with my friend Aleksei Shinkarenko in Minsk. We go back to my first visits to Belarus in 2000, when I started work on my photo book The Waiting Room.

Aleksei is a quiet force in the local scene. He recently opened Cafe Cultura, a clean, minimalist storefront space set up to spark conversation on culture. Basically it's a tiny gallery with a coffee machine. While Aleksei makes your macchiato, the work on the walls is food for thought, and for talk.

He told me customers seem to pick up on that cue, and culture is a hot topic. A big question facing Belarus has long been one of national identity. Many feel it's the main element keeping the country in a kind of limbo between East and West, with Lukashenko being as much effect as cause of Belarus' isolation and uncertainty (depending on who you ask, perhaps up to half the population does support the authoritarian leader up to a point, or at least the degree of stability they feel he brings against buffeting forces from every direction).

Aleksei, along with colleagues like my friend Uladzimir Parfianok - a stalwart of the Soviet-era photo scene in Minsk who also has quietly but doggedly fought for the role of independent photo art - always recognized the potential of photography and art to be a catalyst for progressive thought and even change.

Our first collaborative exhibitions - The Seeing-Eye in 2001 with the Czech photographer Karel Cudlin and Seeing-Eye II in 2003, both at Parfianok's Nova Gallery - helped nurture the idea of the photographer as humanistic observer, which was a rather weak tradition at the time in the tightly controlled landscape of post-Soviet Belarus. Aleksei expanded and built on on those seeds, launching the first independent photo school in Belarus, the Center of Photography.

In 2009, I met the Swedish photographer Jens Olof Lasthein at the school (Jens just so happened to be in Minsk last week and joined our Skype) when we were both invited to be instructors at the first Summer Photopracticum documentary workshops. By then it was clear that the local photo scene had matured to the point where there was a new generation of young photographers - such as Andrei Liankevich, Alex Kladov, Pavel Grabchikov and many others - casting a savvy eye at the Belarus that was evolving (albeit slowly, but evolving nonetheless) from the cliches of 'black hole in Europe' and 'frozen in time' into its own kind of Third Way.

So now Aleksei has this humble, elegant concept, Cafe Cultura, to carry the torch as well. We discussed bringing the franchise to Washington DC, which could also use higher quality discussion of culture, art, and identity. In the meantime, if you're in Minsk, stop by for a кофе with a shot of intelligence.

The Geography of Genius

Hotbeds of genius and innovation depend on these key ingredients

"People were living out of each other’s intellectual pockets. They were sharing ideas. There was enough trust to share your ideas, but enough tension to create some sparks."

"Genius is not really about individuals. It’s really about a collective. It’s about a community of practice."

http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/hotbeds-of-genius-and-innovation-depend-on-these-key-ingredients/